Wat Wana Potiyahn2 here is certainly very peaceful, but this is meaningless if our minds
are not calm. All places are peaceful. That some may seem distracting
is because of our minds. However, a quiet place can help to become
calm, by giving one the opportunity to train and thus harmonize with
its calm.
You should all bear in mind that this practice is difficult. To train
other things is not so difficult, it's easy, but the human mind is
hard to train. The Lord Buddha trained his mind. The mind is the important
thing. Everything within this body-mind system comes together at the
mind. The eyes, ears, nose, tongue and body all receive sensations
and send them into the mind, which is the supervisor of all the other
sense organs. Therefore it is important to train the mind. If the
mind is well trained all problems come to an end. If there are still
problems it's because the mind still doubts, it doesn't know in accordance
with the truth. That is why there are problems.
So recognize that all of you have come fully prepared for practicing
Dhamma. Whether standing, walking, sitting or reclining, the tools
you need with which to practice are well-provided, wherever you are.
They are there, just like the Dhamma. The Dhamma is something which
abounds everywhere. Right here, on land or in water... wherever...
the Dhamma is always there. The Dhamma is perfect and complete, but
it's our practice that's not yet complete.
The Lord, Fully Enlightened Buddha taught a means by which all of
us may practice and come to know this Dhamma. It isn't a big thing,
only a small thing, but it's right. For example, look at hair. If
we know even one strand of hair, then we know every strand, both our
own and also that of others. We know that they are all simply ''hair.''
By knowing one strand of hair we know it all.
Or consider people. If we see the true nature of conditions within
ourselves then we know all the other people in the world also, because
all people are the same. Dhamma is like this. It's a small thing and
yet it's big. That is, to see the truth of one condition is to see
the truth of them all. When we know the truth as it is all problems
come to an end.
Nevertheless, the training is difficult. Why is it difficult? It's
difficult because of wanting, tanhā. If you don't
''want'' then you don't practice. But if you practice out of desire
you won't see the Dhamma. Think about it, all of you. If you don't
want to practice you can't practice. You must first want to practice
in order to actually do the practice. Whether stepping forward or
stepping back you meet desire. This is why the cultivators of the
past have said that this practice is something that's extremely difficult
to do.
You don't see Dhamma because of desire. Sometimes desire is very strong,
you want to see the Dhamma immediately, but the Dhamma is not your
mind - your mind is not yet Dhamma. The Dhamma is one thing and the
mind is another. It's not that whatever you like is Dhamma and whatever
you don't like isn't. That's not the way it goes.
Actually this mind of ours is simply a condition of nature, like a
tree in the forest. If you want a plank or a beam it must come from
the tree, but the tree is still only a tree. It's not yet a beam or
a plank. Before it can really be of use to us we must take that tree
and saw it into beams or planks. It's the same tree but it becomes
transformed into something else. Intrinsically it's just a tree, a
condition of nature. But in its raw state it isn't yet of much use
to those who need timber. Our mind is like this. It is a condition
of nature. As such it perceives thoughts, it discriminates into beautiful
and ugly and so on.
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